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Thai Tourism Grapples with Declining Chinese Visitors


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Posted

If they come to Nai Harn beach it's a <deleted> dump they would turn around and not come back, around the lake is a mess, and the beach is not much better with litter and used coconuts just left on the beach wall, I noticed the other morning plastic bottles and polystyrene food box's just thrown anywhere, 

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Posted

 

so, the highlighted problems are safety concerns and 'inefficiencies' in law enforcement, and the solution is infrastructure development. a certain lack of understanding of the problem perhaps?

Posted

If it's not Chinese tourists misbehaving and treading on locals' toes, it's Russians or Israelis or Brits ...

 

The fundamental problem is the permanent Third World status that any country obsessed with growing its tourist industry imposes on itself. Self-destructive over time. 

 

Thailand is a classic example of putting too much money in the wrong baskets, and hasn't a clue what really builds a modern & prosperous society.

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Posted
12 hours ago, connda said:

Where do you people come from?  Why live in a country that borders China?  <headshake>

Where is the Thai-China border????

Posted

No biggie.

These tourists are a blight anywhere they visit because of their behavior.  And they barely spend any money outside of their tour packages and linked shopping trips.  Good riddance!

Besides, if all those gambling centers do get built, tens of millions of new Chinese will visit, and actually be willing to drop tens of billions of baht at the tables.  

And they won't even leave the casinos, preferring to sleep at their casino hotel rooms, and eat at the casino's Chinese restaurants.  The only time they'll go outside is to get in a taxi for the airport back to China.

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Posted
16 hours ago, webfact said:

While nations like China, Japan, and Vietnam have vigorously updated and expanded their tourist offerings, Thailand has remained anchored to its existing, albeit charming, resources without refreshing its appeal or infrastructure.

 

I think Thais are restricted by the fact that they need to believe that people are queueing up to visit Thailand, and they are only really interested in passive income when it comes to tourism.

 

I find it hard to imagine them admitting, "People don't want to visit Thailand anymore, other countries are better.  We need to work hard to attract and maintain high levels of tourism."  But who knows what the future holds?  More visa-free countries, perhaps?

Posted
13 hours ago, Ohyesuare said:

 

Thailand has no borders with China.

Correct.........

Thailand shares borders with four countries:

Myanmar (to the north and west)

Laos (to the north and east)

Cambodia (to the southeast)

Malaysia (to the south)

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Posted

At one point a few years back the Chinese were the largest body of tourists around the world, all that has changed, as they have been instructed by their overlords to travel domestically, and obedient they are.

 

Also the Chinese tend to be one of the most timid people on earth, aggressive yes, but also very timid, and they scare very easily. 

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Posted
17 hours ago, JoePai said:

Don't worry, tomorrow TAT will tell us all the number from China is increasing by a million %

 

Like months ago.

 

One day, they were "concerned" about  Overtourism(negative impacts on the locals' life & Thai environment by ever increasing foreign visitors)

.

Then, the next day, they were worrying about Not Having Enough Tourists...

 

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Posted
13 hours ago, John Drake said:

A couple of days ago the report was that Chinese by the millions were coming.

 

Thank god they where wrong.

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Posted

Twice in the last year I've seen a China lady squatting on the Soi in broad daylight taking a piss.  Hope they holiday somewhere like India where pissing anywhere is accepted.  Yuck!

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Posted
18 hours ago, webfact said:

image.jpeg

Photo reproduite avec l'aimable autorisation du Centre de recherche Kasikorn

 

Dans un monde du tourisme en pleine évolution, la Thaïlande bénéficiait autrefois de la gloire d'accueillir plus de 10 millions de visiteurs chinois chaque année. Pourtant, des tendances inquiétantes ont perturbé cet âge d'or, assombrissant les perspectives d'avenir. Selon l'Association des agents de voyages thaïlandais (Atta), ce déclin est principalement dû à des préoccupations pressantes en matière de sécurité et à l'inefficacité perçue des forces de l'ordre.

 

Sisdivachr Cheewarattanaporn, président d'Atta, évoque avec émotion les opportunités de croissance manquées au cours des quatre dernières années. Alors que des pays comme la Chine, le Japon et le Vietnam ont considérablement modernisé et développé leur offre touristique, la Thaïlande est restée attachée à ses ressources existantes, certes charmantes, sans moderniser son attrait ni ses infrastructures.

 

Cette stagnation est aggravée par un sentiment d'insécurité généralisé parmi les visiteurs chinois potentiels. « Nous nous en tenons aux anciennes ressources, sans les entretenir ni les améliorer », explique M. Sisdivachr.

 

Les défis actuels ne sont qu’exacerbés par le sentiment négatif abondant qui règne sur les réseaux sociaux chinois, où les problèmes de cyberescroquerie découragent de nombreux touristes potentiels d’explorer les côtes thaïlandaises.

 

L'optimisme entourant le retour au niveau d'avant 2019, qui avait atteint 10 millions de touristes chinois, s'estompe à moins que la Thaïlande ne puisse rapidement garantir la sécurité de ces voyageurs. Sisdivachr reste sceptique quant à la réalisation de l'objectif, même plus modeste, de 8 millions d'arrivées chinoises cette année, prévoyant un nombre plus proche de 7 millions, soit des chiffres légèrement supérieurs aux prévisions pour 2024.

 

L'absence de croissance substantielle du tourisme chinois risque d'impacter les objectifs globaux d'arrivées de touristes étrangers en Thaïlande. Les prévisions du gouvernement, qui visent 39 millions d'arrivées, semblent de plus en plus ambitieuses face à ces défis majeurs.

 

 

Le gouvernement a lancé avec ambition le concept de nouveaux complexes de divertissement, notamment des casinos, pour attirer les touristes. Cependant, Sisdivachr se montre prudent, soulignant les risques potentiels, tels que les problèmes liés aux jeux d'argent chez les visiteurs et les risques de blanchiment d'argent en l'absence de vigilance réglementaire.

 

Il suggère plutôt une mise en œuvre prudente avec peut-être seulement quelques emplacements stratégiques, à savoir Bangkok et d’autres hauts lieux touristiques clés, où les infrastructures sont mûres pour de tels développements.

 

Alors que la Thaïlande se prépare à ses prochaines élections générales en 2027, il plaide pour que le tourisme soit au cœur des discussions économiques, déplorant son absence lors des campagnes précédentes.

 

La Thaïlande se trouve à la croisée des chemins, où l’équilibre complexe entre la modernisation de son offre et la garantie de la sécurité peut façonner l’avenir de son industrie touristique.

 

Alors que le pays fait face à ces défis, les quatre dernières années servent de puissant rappel de l’importance de l’innovation et de la vigilance pour maintenir son statut de destination de voyage de premier ordre, a rapporté le Bangkok Post.

 

news-logo-btm.jpg

-- 2025-03-14

 

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Posted

The reality is quite different...😀
China has invested huge sums of money to develop its tourism industry and its infrastructure, including transportation, to attract its population to stay in the country in favor of national tourism.

 

General Secretary Xi Jinping recently issued important instructions on tourism, emphasizing that since the reform and opening up, especially since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, my country's tourism development has accelerated, establishing the world's largest domestic tourism market and becoming the largest source and destination country for international tourism. The tourism industry has grown from small to large, from weak to strong, and gradually become an emerging strategic pillar, a sector of people's livelihood and happiness, with outstanding characteristics of the times. It has thus successfully embarked on a unique path for the development of Chinese tourism. General Secretary Xi Jinping has made comprehensive arrangements and put forward clear requirements for accelerating the building of a strong tourism nation and promoting high-quality development of the tourism industry.

 

http://jl.people.com.cn/BIG5/n2/2024/0523/c349771-40853798.html

image.png.efbd1865dbac2f6fd29c965db8ede3a2.png

 

 

And it seems to have succeeded, according to Chinese statistics from the Ministry of Tourism.image.png.485b96a95c5930a24784918bb6c356da.png

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Posted


 

Could it be another reason for the absence of Chinese tourists?

 

There have been several documentaries about factory closures, lack of jobs, people fleeing cities, real-estate developers filing for bankruptcy, empty airports and railway stations as well as mall closures.

Any lately visitors to China witnessed this exodus?

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